Robert,

Thanks...I think it is always a difficult decision knowing what to do with a 
new acquisition. Do you restore, preserve, cut etc etc. This was purchased with 
the view to cleaning and is not likely to be anything but a very weathered 
ordinary chondrite but had such aesthetic potential. With some pieces it would 
be sacrilege to even think of cleaning off their characteristic natural patina, 
or cutting into oriented flowing crust. Others need delicate preservation to 
stop them ending up as a pile of rust but without changing their appearance or 
are such precious material that even touching with a slightly greasy finger 
would be wrong.

I find the whole business of curating a collection quite fascinating.

Regards,

Graham



  
---- "meteoritefin...@yahoo.com" <meteoritefin...@yahoo.com> wrote: 
> Graham,
> 
> I think you absolutely did the right thing. Very nicely done, and a gorgeous 
> stone! 
> 
> Congrats,
> Robert Woolard
> 
> 
> On Jan 25, 2010, at 7:16 PM, <ensorama...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi All,
> 
>  It has taken many hours slowly removing the caliche without removing remnant 
> crust or creating 'false' regmaglypts.
> 
> I know some purists would rather see specimens in their 'found' state, but I 
> just couldn't resist trying to bring this ugly duckling back to life.
> 
> http://s760.photobucket.com/albums/xx244/Graham-Ensor/8kgUNWA/
> 
> Graham, Nr Barwell, UK
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